Family Mentor
Become a Family Mentor — Help Families Thrive in Southend-on-Sea
Would you like to make a lasting difference in your community? Are you a good listener with a heart for helping families facing real challenges? If so, the Volunteers Supporting Families – Family Mentor programme in Southend-on-Sea needs you.
What you’ll be doing
- Supporting families with children who are at risk of neglect or harm, or families with existing social care involvement.
- Meeting regularly (once a week for approximately 1 hour) in the family home over a minimum six-month period.
- Offering consistent emotional and practical support: listening, guiding, helping parents build confidence and parenting skills, reducing isolation, navigating day-to-day challenges.
- Working alongside project staff who will match you with a family, train you, and support you throughout.
Who we’re looking for
You don’t need formal experience working with families, just the right qualities and commitment:
- 18 years old or above, living in Southend-on-Sea or nearby.
- Able to commit to weekly visits for at least six months.
- Willing to complete necessary checks (DBS/criminal record), and provide references.
- Caring, patient, reliable: a good listener who can offer non-judgemental support, even when progress is slow.
- Someone with an interest in helping both children and parents. Personal life experience can be helpful.
What you’ll get
Volunteering is giving—but it’s also growing. As a Family Mentor, you’ll receive:
- Full training & ongoing support from experienced project staff.
- Opportunities to develop new skills and gain real experience working with families.
- The chance to make a direct, positive impact by helping to keep families together and preventing children entering care.
- Reimbursement for reasonable out-of-pocket expenses, including travel.
- A strong reference for future work or volunteering opportunities.
Why it matters
Families in Southend-on-Sea are facing pressures such as domestic violence, mental health challenges, substance misuse, and social isolation. By acting as a steady support person, you’ll be part of helping to turn things around—reducing the load on social care, improving life outcomes for children, and offering hope to parents